Integrated
Relay server, Discord, VPN, and Stream Deck working as one system — squads, command, and fire-teams bridged on a single network. One kit per seat, one key per member: the pieces arrive working together, not bolted on by hand.
Integrated. Coordinated. Secure.
PelicanNET is a structured voice-comms relay that bridges Discord voice channels into one disciplined channel hierarchy — built for serious raid operations.
No chatter. No noise. Effective communication.
We're opening a small, free preview to a handful of trusted orgs before the managed service goes commercial. Pilot orgs get the full relay, the apps, and hands-on setup — in exchange for honest feedback after your first raids.
From bots holding every channel, to one key routing command into a squad — broadcast to all five at once, or bridge command-to-command with an allied org. The whole system, in motion.
No Stream Deck? No problem. The PelicanNET Comms Deck is a companion app that turns your keyboard into the same disciplined control surface — pick your seat, hold a key, talk. One download, every squad, nothing extra to buy.
Pick Commander or your squad-lead seat and locking it arms only your keys — and locks every other seat out. No keying the wrong channel mid-fight.
Every line you can open is on screen, lighting up amber the instant you key it. You always know exactly who can hear you right now.
Numpad hotkeys hold-to-talk straight over Star Citizen, with an in-game tooltip so you never look away. Rebind any key from the panel.
Your relay key lives in a private key file beside the app, never inside it. Share the app freely — only your seat unlocks for you.
No extra hardware required. Drive the entire net from your keyboard — the same one-touch control as the Stream Deck, free with every kit.
Inspired by the layered comms of Hell Let Loose and Squad, PelicanNET gives a raid a clean chain of voice channels — command, squad, and fire-team — so the right people hear the right call at the right moment.
Most fleet ops drown in a single overloaded voice channel. PelicanNET routes audio through a structured relay so squad leads talk to command, command broadcasts to all, and fire-teams stay heads-down on their own net — without everyone shouting over each other.
It runs on a hardened relay server with its own VPN, integrates with Discord, and drives one-touch channel switching from a Stream Deck. Officers onboard themselves with a self-serve toolkit — no manual setup per member.
Relay server, Discord, VPN, and Stream Deck working as one system — squads, command, and fire-teams bridged on a single network. One kit per seat, one key per member: the pieces arrive working together, not bolted on by hand.
A disciplined channel hierarchy keeps the right call on the right net — command broadcasts, squad chatter, and fire-team focus, cleanly separated. Every channel opens while a key is held and closes the moment it's released — nothing stays live by accident.
A hardened relay behind its own WireGuard VPN with scoped bot permissions — and a privacy pledge to match. Voice is relayed live and never recorded, and every seat unlocks with its own key that opens only its own channels.
Safe and private isn't a setting we switched on — it's how the relay is built. Three things are true of every PelicanNET net, and our Privacy Policy puts them in writing.
Voice passes through the relay live and is gone the moment it's spoken. Nothing is captured, stored, or analysed — there's no archive of your ops to leak, sell, or mine. What's said on your net stays on your net.
The relay's controls live behind its own WireGuard VPN — there's no public port to find, probe, or brute-force. Your VPN key is generated on your own device and never leaves it; we only ever hold the public half.
The relay bots hold four voice permissions — see, join, speak, transmit — and nothing else. No Administrator, no message permissions: they can't read your server's text channels. And each member's seat key opens only that seat's channels.